Bouck Zachary, Tricco Andrea C, Rosella Laura C, Banack Hailey R, Fox Matthew P, Platt Robert W, Milloy M-J, DeBeck Kora, Hayashi Kanna, Werb Dan
Epidemiology Division, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Centre on Drug Policy Evaluation, St. Michael's Hospital, Unity Health Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Drug Alcohol Depend Rep. 2023 May 25;7:100168. doi: 10.1016/j.dadr.2023.100168. eCollection 2023 Jun.
Among people who inject drugs, frequent injecting and experiencing withdrawal are associated with facilitating others' first injections. As these factors may reflect an underlying substance use disorder, we investigated whether first-line oral opioid agonist treatment (OAT; methadone or buprenorphine/naloxone) reduces the likelihood that people who inject drugs help others initiate injecting.
We used questionnaire data from semi-annual visits between December 2014-May 2018 on 334 people who inject drugs with frequent non-medical opioid use in Vancouver, Canada. We estimated the effect of current first-line OAT on subsequent injection initiation assistance provision (i.e., helped someone initiate injecting in the following six months) using inverse-probability-weighted estimation of repeated measures marginal structural models to reduce confounding and informative censoring by time-fixed and time-varying covariates.
By follow-up visit, 54-64% of participants reported current first-line OAT whereas 3.4-6.9% provided subsequent injection initiation assistance. Per the primary weighted estimate (n = 1114 person-visits), participants currently on first-line OAT (versus no OAT) were 50% less likely, on average, to subsequently help someone initiate injecting (relative risk [RR]=0.50, 95% CI=0.23-1.11). First-line OAT was associated with reduced risk of subsequent injection initiation assistance provision in participants who, at baseline, injected opioids less than daily (RR=0.15, 95% CI=0.05-0.44) but not in those who injected opioids daily (RR=0.86, 95% CI=0.35-2.11).
First-line OAT seemingly reduces the short-term likelihood that people who inject drugs facilitate first injections. However, the extent of this potential effect remains uncertain due to imprecise estimation and observed heterogeneity by baseline opioid injecting frequency.
在注射吸毒者中,频繁注射和经历戒断与促使他人首次注射有关。由于这些因素可能反映出潜在的物质使用障碍,我们调查了一线口服阿片类激动剂治疗(OAT;美沙酮或丁丙诺啡/纳洛酮)是否会降低注射吸毒者帮助他人开始注射的可能性。
我们使用了2014年12月至2018年5月期间在加拿大温哥华对334名频繁非医疗使用阿片类药物的注射吸毒者进行的半年一次随访的问卷数据。我们使用重复测量边际结构模型的逆概率加权估计来估计当前一线OAT对随后注射起始协助提供(即,在接下来的六个月内帮助某人开始注射)的影响,以减少时间固定和时间变化协变量造成的混杂和信息删失。
到随访时,54%-64%的参与者报告当前正在接受一线OAT治疗,而3.4%-6.9%的参与者提供了随后的注射起始协助。根据主要加权估计(n = 1114人次),目前接受一线OAT治疗的参与者(与未接受OAT治疗相比)随后帮助某人开始注射的可能性平均降低了50%(相对风险[RR]=0.50,95%置信区间=0.23-1.11)。一线OAT与基线时非每日注射阿片类药物的参与者随后提供注射起始协助的风险降低有关(RR=0.15,95%置信区间=0.05-0.44),但与每日注射阿片类药物的参与者无关(RR=0.86,95%置信区间=0.35-2.11)。
一线OAT似乎降低了注射吸毒者促使首次注射的短期可能性。然而,由于估计不精确以及观察到的基线阿片类药物注射频率的异质性,这种潜在影响的程度仍不确定。